The common, underlining denominators of all BP typefaces are: (a) support for Greek language, and (b) a huge amount of love injected to each and every one of their characters.

BPmono (2007/2010)

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48px

BPmono

BPmono

BPmonoItalic

BPmonoItalic

BPmonoBold

BPmonoBold

BPmonoStencil

BPmonoStencil

BPmonoRound

BPmonoRound

BPmonoRoundBold

BPmonoRoundBold

Download

A monospaced typeface suitable for technical texts and/or programming. BPmono and BPmono Bold are manually hinted from 9px to 16px making it appropriate for use in various advanced text and programming editors (eg. Visual Studio .net, Visual Web Developer, MS Word etc). All three fonts are available in TTF format.Tip: A monospaced font should always be aligned left (or right, at worst) and never justified or centered in order to remain actually monospaced.Changes: BPmono Bold is introduced, while BPmono and BPmono Italics faced some glyph and hinting corrections (many thanks to Nick Tzanos for his help and suggestions). Additionally, the bold version of the font has a new stencil brother for those occasions who need that extra space. Check it out as well!
Webfont usage

1. Unzip the downloaded file and place the webfont files (.woff, .eot, .ttf) and the accompanying .css file on a specific folder on your server.

2. Copy and paste the code below inside the <head> of the page(s) where you want the webfont to be used

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="[folder]/BPmono.css"/>

where [folder] = the name of the folder where you put the css and webfont files

3. Add the font-family name at the css rules where you want to use the webfont

div { font-family: BPmono, Arial; }

4. If the webfont supports italics, bold and/or bold italics you can use them simply by using <b> and <i> tags inside your html code.

5. If the webfont has a Light or other weight, look at the accompanying .css file to find out what weight value you should use.
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